Variety's tlie ery spico of life, That jfivc it nit its flavor. THE I'OETHY OF Till'. THOUJ5ADO UUS. rilOM THE T.V MONTHLY MAUAZ1NE, Cliv:iljie, Trouth and honour, frcduai and curttsi-;. Chavccr. There are certain ages, in the histo ry of the world, on which the heart dwells with strong interest and affec tion : hut there are none which excite our curiosity, our admiration, and our love, more intensely than the days of chivalry. At that period, the world was enchanted, and history was a ro mance. The heart of man was bolder, and his arm firmer, than in these days of dull reality, while the spirit of ad venturous knighthood was softened with heroic gentleness, and gallant love. The beauty of woman then was a boast and a treasure, and the il mor tal mixture of earth's mould" was wor shipped as a starry divinity. But ki the last crowning rose of all the wreath" was the universal spirit of poetical feeling, which was awakened in the heart of the nations, and which, in its mighty consequences, tended most powerfully to refine away the ignor ance and barbarity, which had been the accumulation of centuries. The foun tains of purer and gentler feelings were opened, and the impetuosity of their first gushing carried away the corrup tions, which had confined them in their source. The effect of this spirit, on the happiness and manners of after times, was prodigious. It spre id re finement and civilization through the world, and, by awakening the soul to a sense of its own powers, it gave the first impulse to that progress of the intellect, which ensures, in its mighty advances, the liberty and welfare of man. But while such beneficial effects have resulted from this early dawn, and out break of mental power, it was neces sarily accompanied by many counter balancing circumstances. The human mind had suffered a great convulsion, and the disordered elements, in as suming a nobler and purer shape, were occasionally mingled together most heterogeneously. All the passions ol the heart worked freely and unchastis ed. In devotion, in love, in arms, and in song, the same vehement feelings of excess displayed themselves. liven the moral boundaries, which later and wiser times have prescribed for them selves, were unseen and disregarded, and this not from any willing proneness to vice, but from an ignorance of the obligations and excellence of virtue. The laxity of morals not of moral feeling, if such a distinction can be made which distinguished that age, laid the foundation of that blamable levity of feeling, which is said to be inherent in the female character in France, and which still continues to exist, though the moral sense of the world has been so materially changed. In the age of chivalry, no disgrace was attached even to the public avowal of female infidelity, and that callous de pravity of heart, which is invariably consequent on the loss of the esteem and respect of our fellow-creatures, then seldom ensued. In the present i i ii . . . : .. 1 . , V , .,. 1 " r . 2UCJ H lilt J 1 C .1 I il II yy kj 1 nvilll' ment, which distinguishes the poetical works of the Provencal writers, with out entering into any disquisition re specting their history or language, which our limits will not allow us to do. The crowning ornament of the Gay Science was the love-poems, in which ,it abounded, and which display the most extraordinary style of sentiment and expression. It would seem that the influence of woman, which, in the ages of classical refinement, had been slighted and disowned, was destined to he acknowledged in its most despot ic shape, in the d ys of chivalrous en thusiasm. The sentiment was new in the world, and it was therefore exces sive and unbounded. It did not bear the shape of love, affection, esteem, or reverence but of passion, worship, and idolatry. The flood-gates of the heart were opened. In the poetry of the Troubadours, the passions seem to have been reduced to their elements, and to have been mingled together again in strange ai.-d marvellous union. Love, however, reigned, eminent and supreme over all, while the strongest emotions and passions of the mind were compelled into his despotic ser vice. Ambition became hir, slave for a smile was a guerdon, tor. which poets and princes contended, and the favor of a woman could bestow more honor, than the hand of a monarch could confer ; nay, even Religion was made subservient to the power of Love, and the awful feelings of vener ation, which are excited by contempla ting the sanctity of Heaven, were lav ished freely on an earthly idol. The sentiments of religious fear or hope, the strongest, perhaps, which can fill the human heart, were mingled with the passion of mortal love, and the terms which are only applicable to the majesty of Heaven, were bestowed, without hesitation, on a capricious mistress, apparently without the slight est expectation of scandalizing; the pious, or insulting the devout. From the works of the Troubadours innu merable instances might be pointed out ol this perversion of sentiment. Bat, while this extravagance of allusion and comparison may be justly censur ed as most improper and absurd, yet, some of the compositions of this kind, where the expression of elevated and devoiional feeling is mingled with the purity of earthly passion, their love poetry acquires a deep -,nd chastened tenderness, which the lighter produc tions of more modern days fail to dis play. M. Raynouard regards this as one of the distinctive characteristics of the Provergal writer?, which those of no other nation, according to him, pos sess. This idea, however, is not cor rect ; for, in tne poetry of Scotland, we find the same delicate mingling of the tenderness of love, and of religious enthusiasm, which exists in some of the Troubadours. The songs and love-poems of Burns contain numer ous instances of this. " Like all men of genius," says Dr. Currie, "he wss of the temperament cf devotion and the powers of memory co-operated, in this instance, with the sensibility of his heart, and the fervour of his imag ination," In the collection of Niths dale and Galloway Songs, eJited by the late lr. Cromek, there arc some verses, to which a more modern ori gin lias been since assigned, which are strongly characteristic or ins stvie ot writing, o The sonjr is eminently ten- der and beautiful. The two first lines are sufficient to give an idea of the style : I swear by my God, my Jcanic, Jy that pretty white hand of thine. And in another song, which has lately been published by the author, to whom the above is attributed, we have the same admixture of ideas. The sim plicity of the image is complete : "In preaching time, so meek she itands, So faintly and so bonnie O, I cannot get one glimpse of grace, .r thieving looks at Nannie O." And again "I guess what Heaven is by her eyes, They sparkle so divinely O." From the remain if the Trouba- dours, M. Ravnouard has selected ma- :B" punucrous masses, ana la nv passages in illustration of this sub-. t!Sl'lnS as even Ylth their beauties, ject, few of which we have endeavor- . fj,e I,oetr.v ,of sentiment, without ed to imitate, nrescrv nP. r.s near v as I Cj ' J merely detached passages from various poems, and that consequently they are ih- expression of a single sentiment. The following stanzas are from Gml- ilaume cle Cabestainjr Thy perfect form of nohlencss and grace, Thy smile, (the language of thy guileless heart,) The fairness of thy Ilcavcn-illumincd face, The sweetnesses of which thou mistress art possible, the tone and force of the sen - . cai1 attention timcnt, though we have in vain attempt-,1?111 -flagging- It is to be enjoyed edto transfuse a portion of the simple , nen IV,ncl ls1,n a mood ,nnd beauty of the original. It must be hci onl b stcal aml morsels.' It r.mpm'rf-fl thnf fhecn nr.. hi frenernl 1S a hard tUSlC l digest three hours w . t Ml, all are present to mv every thought ; ! w . ull"lu Oh ! iir.d to God the'se earthly vows been misused theiru 1 hey cannot, howev given, er, deny, that in many of these poems With all their purity and r.rdour nupht, we finj the lcnccrness antl tlie purhy 51y soul had never then despair d ot Heaven. r , ..... . ... 1 . , . ot love inimitably described. The I here is, pernaps, no circumstance ri, r r .. l. ' , r following very imperfect version of well calculated to awaken tne lull- f.i it -r i t- t so r i r i- l i i ness ot poetical leelmcr, as the death nt Ihnrn t-r ivtmm tllf -.Pilff h fl C hfcll long and fondly attached. Not, in deed, in the first flow and bitterness of irrepressible grief, but when time and the memory of former happiness have mellowed anguish into tender regret. It was under the influence of feelings like these (feigned, or existing in their 41 sad reality," who shall say ?) that Lord Bvron must have written his lines on Thyrza, and that Burns com posed that beautiful lament, " INIy Mary ! dear departed shade !" The same sentiment is contained in the fol lowing lines : In every deed of kindness rnd of love, In cery word so gentle, pure, and wise, I need not pray that Clod her life approve, And call her spirit home to Paradise. And if I slh, and if a silent tear Hushes for her, and trembles in my eye, (Passion's last token,) 'tis not that I'fear For her pure soul's divine felicity. No ! GoJ, amid his glory, hath enshrined Her blest perfecthns. Heaven itself could No jevs, if 'mid its bowers I might not find Her spirit. No! 1 weep because I live. In the following verses, the influ ence of love overpowers the piety of the votary, and passion is made to mingle with prayer, tenderly, but not profanely ; they are imitated from Pons de C :pducii : Yes ! thou art fairest, frankest, gayest, best Adding- to beauty Virtue's sanctity ; And, owning thy perfections to be blest, I do but ask the power of loving thee. So ar lent and .co tender is that love, cri vo ho deep thine image on my soul is wroupfm, T.vit, when 1 pour my humble prayer above, Thou still art mingled with each holy thought. At other times, again, we find lighter allusions to sacred things ; as in the following lines, from a poem of Ram baud d'Orange : I should be grateful, that in dreams Sweet thoughts will come, my heart beguil- For then her bright eye on me beams, Her wreathed lip on me is smiling. No ! Heaven hath not a look more sweet ; And, when her eyes on mc are bending, I would not turn from them, to meet The glance of angels, sky-dcccnding. Even amongst the instances which have been selected by M. Raynouard as the most unexceptionable, we find some which overstep the boundary of devotional propriety, and which, to modern apprehension at least, can scarcelv be sheltered under the milder title", which he has bestowed upon them, of 44 a literary aberration, occa sioned by chivalric ideas and the spir it of the time, in which we rejoice to discover the imprint of nature, and the absence of all restraint." The fol lowing sentence from Huguesde Bach- eierie is jriven in one of the extracts t4 I never recite my Patei-noster when I arrive at the qui cs in ccclo without addressing my soul and heart to thee. Many of the love-poems of the Pro vencals, however, are entirely free from this incongruity of imagery, and display an unmixed purity and tender ness of sentiment. It has, indeed, more than once been objected to these compositions, that there is a sameness and repetition about them, which ren der them insipid and valueless. The objection must apply to all poetry of sentiment. The truth of passion and feeling is changeless. Until we re model the heart, the expression of its true affection will have but little varie ty. This objection has been well com bated by a modern critic. "The re proach of uniformity," says he, 44 strikes me as being a very singular one ; it is as if we should condemn the spring, or a garden, for the multitude of its flow ers ;" and he then remarks, that we arc more sensible of this defect, if it be one, from the circumstance of our being acquainted with these poems in the shape in which they exist in the libraries of the learned, gathered to- 1 i r "" cmivcn, ui xanci) to bur reading of Petrarch's Sonnets, and yet there are times when we would not give one of them for a whole epic. It is in these moods that the love-pieces of the Troubadours should be read. The scholar, the antiquary, or the his torian, who sits down to their perusal as a portion of his daily task, will prob ably despise what his heart fails to com- j prebend, and he will pass his maledic- u uic mubi uruuiuui poems, wnicii, ! , . i- c T - V 1 7 was ever Sung by a fair queen in a summer bower, "With ravishing1 division to her lute," may, perhaps, give some slight and re mote idea of the tenderness and plain tive simplicity, which breathes through the original. It is the complaint of the Countess de Die, who loved and was beloved by Kambaud, Prince of Orange, a celebrated Troubadour and a 1 r.ive knight, but who had forfeited thv jiiiiises of true chivalry by his in constancy and libertinism. Alas ! a!a ! my son is sad ; How should it r.ot be so. "When he ho used to make me 'Tad Now leaves me in my woe ? y ith him, my love, my graciousncss, My beauty all are vain, I feel as though some guiltiness Had mark'd mc with its stain. One sweet thought still has power oVr me In this, my heart's great need, 'Tis that I ne'er was false to ihr.r, Dear friend! in word or deecL I own that nobler virtues fill Thy heart ; love only mine : Yet why are all thy looks so chill Till they oii others shine ? O long-lov'd friend ! I marvel much, Thv heart is so severe, That it will vield not to the touch Of love, and sorrow's tear. 27o ! no ! it cannot be that thou Shouldst seek another love, Oh ! think upon our early vow, And thou will faithful prove. Thy virtue's pride, thy lofty fame, Assure me thou art true, Though fairer ones than 1 may claim Thy hand, and deign to sue. Put tliinkj belov'd one ! that to bless With perfect blessing, thou Must seek for trusting tenderness, Kcmcmber then our vow ! This little poem has excited M. Raynouard's warmest admiration, who declares that the truest and most ex- quisite sentiment dictated it. It is impossible, however, as he justly ob serves, to preserve the grace and deli cacy of it in a translation ; it is like those tender flowers, which breathe ! their perfume only when they are un gathered, but which fade and become odourless the moment they are separ ated from their parent stem. He has instituted a bold comparison between this elegy and the celebrated love-ode of Sappho a comparison which, he says, is well calculated to give us a correct idea of the distinctive peculiar ities of classical and chivalric litera- ture in comnositions of this kind. The pocmofSappho,whichportraysthe pas-: merit, demonstrates a neart as muca sion of love so completelv, that accord- j devoted to piety and virtue as any ac inp; to one of our critics', " it has been j tin which the worthy object of his i eldom so wrell described in the course of two thousand years," in the opin ion of jI. Raynouard, paints a sensi bility entirely material, before the pro gress of civilization had rendered wo man the ornament of society ; while the verse of the poetess of chivalry breathes a sensibility altogether intel lectual. Tender as impassioned, she loves for pure love's sake alone. TO IiC CONCLUDED. FEMALE EDUCATION. Extract from a Sermon on Female Education, ; pleasure tlie Jurc of Merest, or the lately delivered by the Key. Joseph Emerson. , violence of QUr pass'lonSi may be somc? " Surely the mother is a much more j though a poor apology, for" the corn important character than is generally mission of crimes ; but to sit coolly by imagined. To whom are we to look for improvements? for such improve ments as the world has never seen ? Is it to men? to those whose habits are fixed ; whose characters are consolida ted .? No. It is to be the rising gener ation, to children, to babes, tc suck lings. And who has the principal in fluence in forming the habits and char acter of these ? The mother ; she who is with them, and is scarcely re moved from them, by night or by day ; she, uho imparts to them her man ners, her habits, her language, her modes of thinking, her opinions, her prejudices, her virtues, I had almost said, her very soul itself. Surely the mother has more influence in forming the rising generation, than is possess ed by man, with all his authority, with all his laws, with all his arms, with all his splendid literary institutions. Though the mother is indeed subor dinate, as it respects the father, it is infinitely important. Thcugh her sta tion is subordinate, yet in a great mea sure, she carries in her heart, and holds in her hand, the destinies of the world. It is impossible that mankind should be improved to any considera ble degree and extent, without a cor responding improvement of mothers. Here and there individuals may arise and shine, as they have done from the beginning of time ; but improvements will be exceedingly limited, unless mo thers are improved. And even with regard to the most distinguished indi viduals, who have enlightened and as tonished the world, it is probable that the mother has had a greater influence upon their characters, than has gener ally been supposed. Who can tell how much her efforts may have conduced to give such a tone and direction to their minds, as has had an influence upon their whole succeeding conduct ? All the future Bacons, Lockes and Newtons ; all the future Baxters, Ed wardses and Dwights, that are yet to arise and enlighten the world, will owe their influence, in a greater or less de gree, to the mother. From her lips they learn to articulate their own names. j rrom her, they learn to walk, to think, to pray. She," who is truly an excel lent mother, is one of the richest boons of Heaven. u We are assured by the voice of in spiration, that a child left to himself, bringeth his mother to shame. But why does an ungoverned and froward child bring shame upon his mother, more than upon his father? J-5 it not because the mother has a peculiar in fluence, and consequently a peculiar obligation to train her offspring to obe dience and virtue ? " If I could for a moment believe the horrible idea that females have no immortal souls, that to them death is an eternal sleep, even at that time, I would say, L.et the female character be raised, that she may elevate her sons ; let it be exalted to the utmost, that she may exalt humanity." He that receivcth a prophet, in the name of a prophet, shall receive a prophet's reward. 31 ATT. X. 41. By " a prophet" is here to be under stood a holy, religious, and good man ; ; and the meaning of the whole sentence is tnis : lie that-receivetn a pro- phet," that is, he that entertains, as sists, and patronises a religious and I good man, " in the name cf a pro phet, that is, because he is, and has the name and character of a religious and good man, 44 shall receive a pro phet's reward that is, is entitled to, and shall receive as great a reward as the religious and good man himself. That he should receive an equal re ward is perfectly agreeable to divine justice, because, entertaining and pat ronising a pious and virtuous man, from the sole consideration of his i . favour can possibly perform. If this is true, the converse must bz true likewise ; that is, that he that en tertains, protects and patronises an impious, a profligate man, for the sake of his vices, is as criminal, and shall receive as severe a punishment, as the most abandoned of his favourites: and with equal justice, because the appro bation of wickedness in others, hav ing no temptation for an excuse, is more atrocious, and demonstrates a more denraved disnosition. than even Draclice Qr h. The seduction of and view with pleasure the iniquities and profligacy of others, and to en courage them by our favour, approba tion, and rewards, indicates a dispo sition more completely depraved than the commission of them, but denraved as it is, we see instances of it every day ; we see the most impious and pro fane, the most corrupt and dissolute, sometimes the idols of the vulgar, and more frequently the idols of the great ; we see them, without any introduction or recommendation, except their vices, entertained, caressed, and patronised by the rich and powerful, who look with envy and admiration on a degree of profligacy in them, which they themselves are unable to arrive at. EX TRACT. Men spend their lives in anticipa tion, in determining to be vastly happy at some future period or other, when they have time. But the present tirns has one advantage over any other it is our own. Past opportunities are gone, future are not come. We may lay in a stock of pleasure, as we would a stock of wine ; but if we defer tast ing of them too long, we shall find that they both are soured by age. Let our happiness, therefore, be a modest mansion which we enn inhabit while we have our health and vigor to enjoy it; not a fabric so vast and expensive, that it has cost us the best part of our lives to build, and which we can expect to occupy only when we have less occa sion for an habitation than a tomb. It has been well observed, that we should treat futurity as an aged friend, from whom we expect a rich legacy. Let us do nothing to forfeit his esteem, and treat him with respect, not with scur rility. But let us not be too prodigal when we are young, nor too parsimo nious when we are old, otherwise vj shall fall into the common error of those who, when they had the power to enjoy, had not the prudence to ac quire ; and when they had prudence to acquire, had no longer the power to enjoy. By the very constitution of our being, we are compelled to delight in society : 4 it is not good for man to be alone" : we are all exactly fitted to contribute to the good of all ; and it is by each carrying his respective amount to the general bank of human happiness, that each is enabled to draw most largely for his private accommodation.